Viceroy on Rattlesnake Master
Photo by Matt Valencic
Summer is about flowers and insects!
Summer is about flowers and insects!
April will bring about 35 species of birds to NE Ohio. Some will stay for the summer and some will just be passing through. Pine Warblers will nest here in any type of pine tree. Their trill-like song reminds you of a Junco or Chipping...
April will bring about 35 species of birds to NE Ohio. Some will stay for the summer and some will just be passing through. The Fox Sparrow scratches the ground in search of seeds and insects. Look for it on the forest floor and under...
April will bring about 35 species of birds to NE Ohio. Some will stay for the summer and some will just be passing through. American Bittern is a wading bird in the marsh. More easily seen now before the cattails grow tall. Its deep, gulping...
April will bring about 35 species of birds to NE Ohio. Some will stay for the summer and some will just be passing through. Virginia Rail is a marsh bird that moves easily among the cattails and reeds in search of any living creature it can...
April will bring about 35 species of birds to NE Ohio. Some will stay for the summer and some will just be passing through. Brown Thrashers like dense thickets next to fields and forests. Learn its crazy, mixed up song, a medley of musical phrases...
Snow Buntings blend well into our snowy agricultural fields during winter where they forage for spent grains as well as weed seeds and insects. Soon they will leave for the tundra where the males secure a nest site in rocky areas, waiting for the females...
Common Redpolls don’t visit NE Ohio every year so the hundreds being seen this year are a real treat. They may visit your thistle (nyger) feeder but most likely the flock will be foraging on catkins of birch and alder. They can survive to -65F...
Horned Larks inhabit most of the continental US all year round! Because they prefer to forage for seeds and insects on the ground we see them better in winter, especially on bare, agricultural fields. In spring, females will make a nest in a depression on...
In winter, Lapland Longspurs could be overlooked as just another LBJ (little brown job – aka, sparrow), except that most of our sparrows don’t inhabit open fields during winter. They nest in the high tundra where it is estimated they eat over 3,000 seeds and...